dbo:abstract
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- Black Thursday is a term used to refer to typically negative, notable events that have occurred on a Thursday. It has been used in the following cases:
* 6 February 1851, bushfires in Victoria, Australia.
* 18 September 1873, during the Panic of 1873, the U.S. bank Jay Cooke & Company declared bankruptcy, triggering a series of bank failures
* 21 June 1877, execution of 10 suspected leaders of the "Molly Maguires" that became known as “Black Thursday.”
* 8 November 1901 (21 November in the Gregorian calendar), the climax of the gospel riots in Athens.
* 24 October 1929, start of the Wall Street Crash of 1929. "Black Tuesday" was the following week on 29 October 1929.
* 15 August 1940, Schwarzer Donnerstag ("Black Thursday"), when the German Luftwaffe mounted its largest number of sorties during the Battle of Britain, and suffered its heaviest losses; known in Britain as "The Greatest Day"
* 14 October 1943, when the USAAF suffered large losses during bombing in the second Schweinfurt raid during World War II
* The night of 16/17 December 1943, when RAF Bomber Command losses during the Berlin bombing campaign were particularly high.
* 12 April 1951 was nicknamed "Black Thursday" by USAF pilots after three MiG-15 squadrons with 30 aircraft attacked 48 B-29 Superfortress bombers protected by about a hundred F-80 Shooting Star and F-84 Thunderjet fighters, over Korea, resulting in the destruction of 10 B-29s.
* 12 May 1955, first day of the Hock Lee Bus Riots in Singapore
* 1 September 1960, a disastrous day for American track and field favourites in the Olympic stadium at the 1960 Rome Olympics
* 4 April 1963, 127 fires burn 185,000 acres in North Carolina
* 21 November 1968, day of protests by students at University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh
* 17 December 1970, shipyard workers and protesters were killed by the army and militia during the massive protests in Gdynia, Poland
* 12 April 1973, clashes between the police and right-wing demonstrators in Milan resulted in the killing of policeman Antonio Marino.
* 30 May 1975, the massacre of about 50 Lebanese Christians in the area of Bashoura in West Beirut.
* 22 January 1987, the Mendiola massacre, in which state security forces violently dispersed a farmers' march to Malacañan Palace
* 8 February 1996, the Black World Wide Web protest against the Communications Decency Act in the United States
* 24 July 2003, Jueves negro (Spanish for "Black Thursday"), when violent political demonstrations created havoc in Guatemala City
* The 6 May 2010 Flash Crash, when the Dow Jones briefly lost more than 900 points
* 30 September 2009, when the Irish government revealed to its people the alleged full cost of bailing out Anglo-Irish Bank
* 30 September 2010 in Stuttgart, when German police forces used excessive force against protesters that demonstrated against the Stuttgart 21 train station building project.
* 16 January 2014, when the Parliament of Ukraine ratified restrictive anti-protest laws amid massive anti-government protests.
* 12 June 2014, when WWE fired 11 wrestlers.
* 15 November 2018, the Franco-Ontarian jeudi noir when the government of Ontario announced the elimination of several Franco-Ontarian institutions
* 12 March 2020, Black Thursday stock market crash
* "Black Thursday", the week day preceding Black Friday (en)
- 검은 목요일(Black Thursday)에는 다음이 있다.
* 1929년 월스트리트 대폭락
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* 2020년 주가 대폭락 (ko)
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rdfs:comment
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- 검은 목요일(Black Thursday)에는 다음이 있다.
* 1929년 월스트리트 대폭락
*
* 2020년 주가 대폭락 (ko)
- Black Thursday is a term used to refer to typically negative, notable events that have occurred on a Thursday. It has been used in the following cases:
* 6 February 1851, bushfires in Victoria, Australia.
* 18 September 1873, during the Panic of 1873, the U.S. bank Jay Cooke & Company declared bankruptcy, triggering a series of bank failures
* 21 June 1877, execution of 10 suspected leaders of the "Molly Maguires" that became known as “Black Thursday.”
* 8 November 1901 (21 November in the Gregorian calendar), the climax of the gospel riots in Athens.
* 24 October 1929, start of the Wall Street Crash of 1929. "Black Tuesday" was the following week on 29 October 1929.
* 15 August 1940, Schwarzer Donnerstag ("Black Thursday"), when the German Luftwaffe mounted its largest number of sor (en)
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